And then, as suddenly as it had begun, it was over. The intense, crushing pressure vanished, replaced by a flicker of something new, and far more unsettling, in the old man’s eyes. A flicker of ancient, profound, and deeply personal recognition. The Don Garcia finally, after an eternity of silence, spoke. His voice was a low, gravelly, and ancient sound, like stones grinding together at the bottom of a deep, dark river. And the words he spoke were not the words Lloyd had expected. He did not greet him as Lord Ferrum. He did not acknowledge the roaring, silver lion on his chest. He looked past the father, past the name, past the house, and he saw the mother. “Jerrom Austin’s grandson,” he rumbled, and the words were not a greeting. They were a pronouncement. A judgment. A deliberate, pointed, and utterly dismissive acknowledgment of his maternal line, a subtle, but absolute, denial of the Ferrum name, of the new world, of everything that Lloyd represented. The words hung in the cold, still air of the ancient hall like an unspoken, and deeply personal, challenge. The game had begun, and the Don Garcia had just, with a single, quiet, and devastatingly brilliant move, taken the first piece. The Don’s words were a perfectly aimed, beautifully crafted, and utterly disarming opening gambit. In a single, quiet statement, he had completely, and masterfully, reframed the entire context of their meeting. Lloyd had come here as Lord Ferrum, a representative of a great and powerful house of the new kingdom. The Don, with his ancient, gravelly voice, had erased that identity, casting him instead as the scion of a different, and in his eyes, far more interesting, lineage. The Austins. A family as old, as proud, and as deeply rooted in the esoteric, forgotten arts of the old world as his own. He was not just denying the Ferrum name; he was issuing a challenge. He was saying, in the silent, unspoken language of the ancient houses: You are not one of them. You are one of us. Prove it. Lloyd’s mind, which had been braced for a battle of politics, of pride, of ancient, simmering hatreds, was momentarily thrown off balance. This was a different kind of game, a more subtle, more personal, and infinitely more dangerous one. He saw Diego, standing a few paces behind him, give a small, almost imperceptible shake of his head, a silent, desperate warning. Do not take the bait. Be the Ferrum. Be the diplomat. But the soldier, the pragmatist, the part of him that knew, with an absolute and unyielding certainty, that to play the game on his opponent’s terms was to lose before the first move was even made, made a different calculation. He would not be the Ferrum. He would not be the Austin. He would be himself. He met the Don’s ancient, piercing gaze and, for the first time, he allowed a small, genuine, and utterly unapologetic smile to touch his lips. “I am,” he agreed, his voice a calm, steady instrument that did not waver under the weight of the old man’s presence. “And I am also my father’s son. I am a paradox, Don Garcia. A creature of two worlds. The old and the new. It makes for… interesting conversations.” It was a brilliant counter-move. He had not denied his Austin heritage; he had embraced it. But he had also, in the same breath, reaffirmed his identity as a Ferrum, a lord of the new kingdom. He had not just accepted the Don’s challenge; he had raised the stakes, declaring himself a bridge between their two worlds, a living embodiment of the very conflict that defined their existence. A flicker of something—surprise? amusement? respect?—ignited in the depths of the Don’s ancient, raptor-like eyes. The old man had expected a simple, predictable pawn. He had found, instead, a player. A grandmaster. The Don gave a slow, almost imperceptible nod, a gesture of acknowledgment from one ancient, predatory soul to another. “Indeed,” he rumbled. “A paradox. And paradoxes are always… interesting.” He gestured, with a single, gnarled finger, to a simple, hard-backed wooden chair that had been placed, with a deliberate, and almost insulting, humility, at the foot of his massive, petrified throne. “Sit. Tell me what trouble a paradox has brought to my quiet, forgotten corner of the world.” Lloyd took the chair, the act itself a concession, a formal acknowledgment of the old man’s absolute authority in this place. He sat, his back straight, his posture that of a supplicant, but his eyes were the eyes of an equal. He did not begin with a plea. He did not begin with a justification. He began with a story. He spoke of the South, of a noble, and ancient, and deeply respected house. He spoke of a matriarch, a woman of great strength and wisdom, who had been struck down not by a simple illness, but by a curse. A dark, insidious, and ancient curse that was slowly, patiently, and cruelly devouring her soul. He spoke not as a lord, not as a politician, but as a healer. As a scholar. He used the language of the old world, the language of esoteric arts, of spiritual maladies, of a fundamental, cosmic imbalance. He was speaking the Don’s language. And as he spoke, he felt the old man’s gaze upon him once more, but this time, it was not a probe. It was not a test. It was… listening. The ancient, ghost-king of the Garcia estate, the man who had not received a guest in twenty years, the man who held a thousand years of hatred in his heart for the new world, was listening, with a profound, and deeply personal, interest, to the story of a dying woman from a rival house. Official source ıs 𝔫𝔬𝔳𝔢𝔩·𝔣𝔦𝔯𝔢·𝔫𝔢𝔱 The game was still afoot. The prize was still a universe away. But Lloyd, with his first, audacious, and utterly brilliant move, had just, against all odds, managed to get his foot in the door. And he knew, with a certainty that was both terrifying and exhilarating, that the true, and most dangerous, part of the game had only just begun. Lloyd’s story, a quiet, carefully crafted narrative of a dying woman and a desperate, impossible quest, settled in the vast, echoing silence of the Don’s throne room. He had spoken not as a Ferrum, not as a lord of the new kingdom, but as a scholar, a healer, a fellow traveler in the old, forgotten ways of esoteric, spiritual maladies. He had deliberately, masterfully, spoken the Don’s own ancient, somber language. He had expected a reaction. A flicker of interest. A gruff, dismissive question. He had not expected the profound, absolute, and utterly unnerving silence that followed. Don Garcia sat upon his petrified throne, a living statue, his ancient, raptor-like eyes hooded, his expression a mask of stone, revealing nothing. The silence stretched, becoming a weapon in itself, a test of will, a tool to unnerve and to dominate. Diego, standing a respectful distance away, was visibly sweating, his usual cheerful demeanor completely erased by the sheer, crushing weight of his grandfather’s silence. Finally, after an eternity that seemed to stretch into a new, geological age, Lloyd knew he could wait no longer. He had to press his advantage, however small, however fragile. “And so, Don Garcia,” he said, his voice a calm, steady instrument that did not betray the frantic, tactical calculations that were racing through his mind, “having exhausted all other avenues, having sought the counsel of the greatest healers and alchemists of this age and found them wanting, I have come to you. I have come to this ancient, and most honorable, house, as a supplicant. I have come to ask for a great, and perhaps an impossible, boon.” The Don’s gaze did not waver. His expression did not change. But he did, finally, speak. His voice was the low, gravelly rumble of stones shifting deep within the earth. “What is it you seek, Jerrom Austin’s grandson?” Lloyd took a deep, steadying breath. This was the moment. The crux of the entire, desperate gambit. “A leaf,” he said, his voice clear, steady, and utterly unapologetic. “A single, perfect leaf from the Violent Purple Tree that grows in your ancestral gardens.” The words detonated in the silent hall. It was not a request; it was a sacrilege. It was a barbarian asking for the most sacred, most holy relic from the heart of a fallen empire. Diego let out a small, choked gasp, his face going pale with a new and more profound kind of horror. He looked as if he was about to physically tackle his friend, to drag him from the hall before he could be incinerated by the sheer, blasphemous audacity of his own words. The Don’s reaction was instantaneous. It was absolute. And it was exactly what Lloyd had expected. The word was not a shout. It was not a roar of anger. It was a quiet, simple, and utterly final statement of an unalterable fact. It was the sound of a mountain refusing to move. It was the sound of a door being slammed shut, bolted, and barred for all eternity. He then, for the first time, dismissed Lloyd with his gaze, turning his ancient, terrible eyes to his grandson. “Diego,” he rumbled, his voice now holding a new, and deeply dangerous, note of cold, quiet fury. “Remove this… guest… from my hall. His business here is concluded.”